I donāt want to put words in the EPās mouth, but thatās not what I got out of the address. The Patriarch seemed to be saying, rather, that as we are ontologically different, we have fundamentally different ways of being, and as such, the East and the West (both) are not able to understand each other, as we cannot simply decide ātoday I am going to inhabit the mind of a Western theologianā, or ātoday I am going to practice the faith according to Eastern praxis, and it will transform my way of being a Christian.ā Iāve noticed that even myself, and Iām certainly not going to claim that Iāve somehow inhabited the minds of the Oriental Fathers. And yet, I have found myself mostly confined a few threads here because much of what is posted here does not make a whole lot of sense to me. I wouldnāt think to ask many of the questions that apparently preoccupy many people here, and have preoccupied many theologians in the Catholic church. They just donāt occupy my thoughts and inform my practice. So far from Latin Christianity not āgetting itā, Iād say that I donāt get you. And, indeed, in my journey from Catholicism to Orthodoxy I found that there was indeed an evolution in thought and practice from the early days of the Roman saints like St. Arsenius and others of the Orthodox period, to the Great Schism and afterwards to today.
Okay, I think I understand better now.
I am sure I am not as familiar with oriental or even eastern Christianity as you are. That said, to a smaller degree I have indeed experienced that east and west think about the Christian faith and life in very different ways.
People, in my experience, generally find they relate better to one way of thinking or another. I have grown up Latin Catholic, but the differences I have discovered between east and west - and let me again emphasize that I am by no means well-schooled in eastern theology and spirituality - have
always left me feeling that the eastern approach just makes way more sense. Itās as if it cuts to the heart of the matter in a way that western theologyās approach does not, and I do relate more to the east (the more I learn about it, that is).
On these matters I do not disagree with you. Everyone can tell there is a difference.
What I find puzzling and inexplicable, on the other hand, is how Orthodox Christians sometimes, in discussions, move seamlessly - without warning, clarification, or notice - between this matter (āwe have fundamentally different ways of believing and living the faithā) to an entirely separate matter -
whether the western tradition is orthodox.
When Orthodox Christians bring up the EPās quote, they often do so to illustrate why we cannot yet be in communion with each other. But that makes no sense as an argument, because one side or anotherās being
heterodox is the only good reason not to work for reconciliation.
I do not dispute, therefore, that Orthodox Christians have good reason not to want communion with Rome - they/you do believe, after all, that Rome is heterodox. So that makes sense.
But this sometimes-offered implication - one that is
rarely openly stated, but which is becoming quite clear - that we are heterodox because the western Christian mind is so different from the eastern Christian mind, makes no sense to me.
When I discovered ways in which I found eastern spirituality very illuminating and helpful, my natural impulse has never been, āWow, our traditions canāt even understand each other,ā but rather, āWow, the east, whether Catholic or Orthodox, understands my Catholic faith better than many of my own teachers!ā
So I guess what Iām saying is this:
To argue that Rome is heterodox because Catholic teaching X, Y, or Z (universal papal jurisdiction, purgatory, etc.) is heterodox, I can understand and respect.
To point out, however, how different the eastern and western mind and heart are - and have been long before the East-West Schism formalized - as a way of implying that the west is heterodox, makes no sense to me.
I can still listen to old Mozarabic chant (dating back to the 6th century) and find very little fault in its texts (some are very strange and rather unclear as to how they relate to the core liturgical texts, but none appear
heretical despite the Visigothic Arian period that preceded them). So itās not as though the Latins are hopeless or donāt have any Orthodox history of their own to draw from (after all, our beloved St. Athanasius was exiled to Belgium, and I donāt think he sat on his hands once there

), but it matters little since the modern RCC insists that what it is doing and believing now is consistent with the apostolic faith.
What Iām about to say doesnāt prove anything because it doesnāt constitute evidence (as history can change), but my honest impression is that there seems to be more continuity in the west than the east sometimes, in the sense of heresy vs. orthodoxy in first millennium Christian history. The east really had a tough job in having to work through all sorts of heresies, while Rome stood pretty firm against them all, constantly supporting whichever side Orthodoxy inevitably vindicated. As most Catholics do, I see providence rather than historic coincidence in this. I believe that Rome still is what St. Cyprian said she isā¦